Deck 2: The Who, How, and Why of Research

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Question
Stopping people to answer your questionnaire as they pass you in a mall is an example of what type of sampling strategy?

A) Convenience sample
B) Snowball sample
C) Simple random sample
D) Cluster sample
E) Systematic sample
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Question
If you were to select a sample of college students at your university by surveying the students enrolled in your classes this semester, you would have a:

A) random sample
B) non-random sample
Question
Drawing a sample of neighborhoods in a city, and selecting from this group a sample of city blocks, and then selecting every 5th house on a block, is an example of what type of sampling strategy?

A) Convenience sample
B) Snowball sample
C) Simple random sample
D) Cluster sample
E) Systematic sample
Question
In your study of college students' exam-related stress you select a random sample of 400 students at your college to participate, but only 180 students respond to your internet survey. If these respondents seem motivated to respond to your survey because they experience high stress and this is a topic that is important to them, you have a problem with:

A) statistical weighting
B) response bias
C) margin of error
D) cohort effects
E) attrition
Question
In a study assessing the effects of violent films on children's empathy, the independent variable is:

A) Level of film violence
B) Level of empathy following the film
Question
'Finding Nemo' (an animated children's film) and a Harry Potter movie are both showing at the same time at the local theatre. You decide to conduct a study in which you measure children's levels of empathy as they leave the theatre. Which of the following best describes this research?

A) naturalistic observation
B) quasi-experimental research
C) experimental research
Question
You are interested in what predicts whether adolescents will engage in illegal drug use. You select a sample of 8th grade students and follow these same students through high school, collecting data each year. This is an example of a/n:

A) cross-sectional design
B) longitudinal design
C) one-shot design
D) repeated independent-samples design
E) naturalistic design
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Deck 2: The Who, How, and Why of Research
1
Stopping people to answer your questionnaire as they pass you in a mall is an example of what type of sampling strategy?

A) Convenience sample
B) Snowball sample
C) Simple random sample
D) Cluster sample
E) Systematic sample
A
2
If you were to select a sample of college students at your university by surveying the students enrolled in your classes this semester, you would have a:

A) random sample
B) non-random sample
B
3
Drawing a sample of neighborhoods in a city, and selecting from this group a sample of city blocks, and then selecting every 5th house on a block, is an example of what type of sampling strategy?

A) Convenience sample
B) Snowball sample
C) Simple random sample
D) Cluster sample
E) Systematic sample
D
4
In your study of college students' exam-related stress you select a random sample of 400 students at your college to participate, but only 180 students respond to your internet survey. If these respondents seem motivated to respond to your survey because they experience high stress and this is a topic that is important to them, you have a problem with:

A) statistical weighting
B) response bias
C) margin of error
D) cohort effects
E) attrition
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5
In a study assessing the effects of violent films on children's empathy, the independent variable is:

A) Level of film violence
B) Level of empathy following the film
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 7 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
'Finding Nemo' (an animated children's film) and a Harry Potter movie are both showing at the same time at the local theatre. You decide to conduct a study in which you measure children's levels of empathy as they leave the theatre. Which of the following best describes this research?

A) naturalistic observation
B) quasi-experimental research
C) experimental research
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 7 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
You are interested in what predicts whether adolescents will engage in illegal drug use. You select a sample of 8th grade students and follow these same students through high school, collecting data each year. This is an example of a/n:

A) cross-sectional design
B) longitudinal design
C) one-shot design
D) repeated independent-samples design
E) naturalistic design
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 7 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 7 flashcards in this deck.